So what Iâm showing you is that all this hocus-pocus about the fear of nothingness is that, truly speaking, ânothingnessâ is what we want to talk about when we talk about the spiritual. Only, itâs all been ignored! Itâs all been put down! You say, Oh, nothingness, blegh! Heaven preserve us from that! But thatâs where the secret lies! And obviously the secret always lies in a place you never think of looking for it.
In mythology this comes again and again. Okayâthis is Christmasâwhere is the Christ born? In a palace? No. Where no one would think of looking: in pigsty. Although, I have a Japanese friend who once said to meâhe said, You know, the real difference between Christianity and Buddhism is that Christ was the son of a carpenter and Buddha the son of a prince. (I thought that was rather funny.) Well, we donât know who the prince is without the carpenter, do we?
Now, itâs in that sense, really, that I could suggest to you that you meditate on nothingness. I know you canât think about it. But yet, when it becomes perfectly clear to you that thatâs what you are, and what you were before you were born, where can anybody stick a knife into you? Fundamentally, you see? Alright. Get it? Because this is really the secret to the whole thing. If you see thatânow, we want to go on and be able to answer all the people who will come bug us about it, because whether you say anything about it to other people or not, people are going to bug you about this and say, Oh, no, no, no, no. Hereâyou really are something. You know, youâyouâll know it. Wowee! Life isnât the way you think. La la la la la. Itâs gonna be awful, see, I mean real! Woo! And theyâll say, Okay, where in such a philosophy as this is there any basis for the love of oneâs fellow man? For joy in children? For cultivating gardens, for doing this and that and the other? See? There is no basis in it! Thatâs the same way there is no basis in emptiness for form; or so it seems. But only precisely to the degree that you have discovered the nothingness that you are, you find that you are suddenly full of energy. That is energy. Itâs the source and origin of energy. So that when, you know, when thereâs sort of nothing in your way, then you can do exactly what I was describing as having this glee for going into doing this, that, and the other thing, and being thoroughly creative.
But you canât be creative out of just plain somethingness. You need nothingness to be creative. And thatâs what we are. And this, too, is real nothingness; itâs not darkness, itâs not like being buried alive forever, itâs not like rest. Even when the Catholics sing:
Rest eternal grant unto them, O Lord.
And let light perpetual shine upon them.
This isnât rest, because it isnât motion. Neither motion nor rest. What is it? Nobody can imagine. And itâs at that point, you see, where the imagination completely runs out and stops. there weâve hit the thing. See, there you are, right at the fundamental mystical reality. Now, what this is we are talking about, is what mystics have quite often discussed. This isnât read very much. Itâs a state called agnosia, which means âunknowing.â
Thereâs a book called the Cloud of Unknowing, written by an English monk in the 14th Century. But itâs based on another book called Theologia Mystica, which was written in the 6th Century by an unknown Syrian monk who used the name of Dionysius the Areopagite. Absolutely fascinating, very short little bookâwhich I translated long ago, back in 1943, and Iâm about to reissue it. But this book ends up with a description of God which is all in negatives. Not any kind of anything you can imagine at all. Not light, not power, not spirit, not fathershood, not sonship, not this, that, and the otherâall the way down the line. Everything that anybodyâs ever said or thought about God is denied. Because God is infinite, and therefore beyond the reach of any conception at all. So he says that anybody whoâhaving a visionâthought he saw God, would not have seen God but some creature that God has made who is less than God.
So again, you approachâin a Christian context, said in such a way that even Saint Thomas Aquinas bought itâthat you canât impute heresy to it. Because everybodyâs got to agree that God is the which in which there is no whicher, and this guy spells it out. So, in the same way, you get Nagarjuna saying that the ultimate reality is ĆĆ«nyatÄ, voidness.
So Shankara gets at it when he says, That which is the knower or the knowing in everything can never itself be an object of its own knowledge; for fire doesnât burn itself, although it burns other things. So we never know what the Brahman is, just like the eyes don't ever see the head. If you put something there, you are stopping short of nothing and you donât get the whole benefit of it, thatâs all. If you insist that there is something there, that there is the Loving Father at the end of the line, or the Paradise Garden, you are really cheating yourself. Because itâs only when you have thorough emptiness and real downright nothingness at the end of the line, that you get the full impact. No holds. Look, mama, no hands! See?
Now, I really think thatâs the simplest thing I can possibly tell you. I really donât know what else there is to be said about this whole Zen project, or mysticism, VedÄnta, what have you. It comes down to that, and there are infinitely many ways of evading. But what Iâm trying to point out to you, you see, is the way in which you see the point [is] by taking the line of least resistance. By facing the facts. By not super-adding to truth something you contribute to it; your own business that you put up. But saying, If I follow what I can see, or can see with my senses, to be reality as far as we can look, it seems that this is sort of the inevitable conclusion. Which everybody has spent endless effort in arguing about and resisting. Not realizing thatâif they went the whole wayâhow splendid it would be. And thatâs all you have to do.